Mission Photograph Album - Japan - O.P. #01 Page 0126
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Dublin CoreTitleMission Photograph Album - Japan - O.P. #01 Page 0126
Date1900-1930
CreatorBoard of Missions of the Methodist Episcopal Church
SubjectMissions
Japan
RightsFor permission to use or for higher quality reproduction contact research@gcah.org
PublisherThe General Commission on Archives and History of the United Methodist Church
ScriptusTranscription45470 Binzuru Sama. It is said that Buddha confessed on him the power to cure all human ills. For this reason believers rub the image of Binzuru on that part which may be causing them pain in their own bodies, and then rub themselves in the hope of obtaining relief and thus it comes about that such images are often found with the limbs partly worn away, and the features nearly obliterated. Binzuru is a highly popular object of worship with the lower classes and his image is often to be seen adorned by his devotees with a red or yellow hood, a bib, and mittens. JanOP1-126:2 Great Buddha at Kamakura, Japan. "A statue cold set and moulded in colossal clam." Dates from 1252 A.D. Eyes are of pure gold. The image is formed of sheets of bronze cast separately brazed together and finished off on the outside with the chisel. The hollow interior of the image contains a small shrine, and a ladder leads up into the head. Height 49 ft. 7 in., circum 97 ft. 2 in., Length of Eye 3 ft. 11 in., Length from knee to knee 35 ft. 8 in. 45840 Jiso, the compassionate Buddhist helper of those who are in trouble. His image is often heaped with pebbles, which serve in the other world to relieve the labours of the young who have been robbed of their garments by the hag named Sho-zuka-no-baba and then set by her to perform the endleess task of piling up stones on the banks of the river Sai-no-Kawara the Buddhist Styx. The similarity of the two names Jiso and Jesus is suggestive but the only connection that both are lovers of children. StatusCompleted
Percent Completed100
Percent Needs Review0
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